Noun
an eclipse of the sun
The popularity of television led to the eclipse of the radio drama.
an artist whose reputation has long been in eclipseVerb
The sun was partially eclipsed by the moon.
Train travel was eclipsed by the growth of commercial airlines.
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Noun
Situated close to the point of greatest eclipse, Luxor will enjoy more than six minutes of totality amid some of the clearest skies along the entire eclipse track.—
Jamie Carter,
Forbes.com,
27 June 2026 The people-watching nearly eclipses watching the games.—Fort Worth Star-Telegram,
26 June 2026
Verb
Toy Story 5 seems likely to eclipse everything, only in its second weekend after a $159 million domestic opener.—
Paul Tassi,
Forbes.com,
26 June 2026 The French capital is in the midst of a heat wave — the day of the show was the city’s hottest ever June day, until Wednesday eclipsed it — and the model’s toes steamed inside the oblong footwear.—
Rachel Tashjian,
CNN Money,
26 June 2026 See All Example Sentences for eclipse
Word History
Etymology
Noun
borrowed from Middle English eclipse, clips, borrowed from Anglo-French eclyps, eclypse, borrowed from Latin eclīpsis, borrowed from Greek ékleipsis "abandonment, failure, cessation, obscuring of a celestial body by another," from ekleípein "to leave out, abandon, cease, die, be obscured (of a celestial body)" (from ek-ec- + leípein "to leave, quit, be missing") + -sis-sis — more at delinquent entry 2
Verb
Middle English eclypsen, clypsen, derivative of eclipseeclipse entry 1, probably after Medieval Latin eclīpsāre or Middle French esclipser